Applications

Applications

RealSpace is intended for people whose work depends on prolonged, high-attention screen viewing. The initial focus is medical imaging, where visual comfort, clarity and sustained concentration are central to day-to-day work. The same optical principles may later apply to other visually intensive fields.

01

Radiology and medical imaging

Radiologists spend much of their working day interpreting high-resolution images on diagnostic displays. Digital eye strain and dry-eye symptoms are recognised issues in this environment. RealSpace is being developed as a non-invasive optical workstation intervention to reduce visual discomfort during prolonged reporting, without altering PACS software, diagnostic images or clinical workflow.

02

Film and video editing

Editors and colourists work for long periods on high-resolution displays, often making subtle judgements about contrast, depth, motion and detail. RealSpace may offer a more comfortable way to interrogate complex visual scenes while preserving the native display and editing environment.

03

Industrial and CAD design

Designers and engineers rely on spatial judgement, fine detail and long-duration screen work. RealSpace may support more comfortable viewing of dense 2D and 3D design interfaces without requiring a headset or moving work into a new software environment.

04

Defence and intelligence imagery analysis

Image analysts often review complex visual material over extended sessions. RealSpace may be relevant where sustained attention, image structure and visual endurance matter, while existing secure display workflows must remain unchanged.

05

Professional gaming and esports

Competitive players and high-end PC users already invest in displays, peripherals and ergonomics. RealSpace may offer an optical route to stronger depth perception and reduced visual effort while retaining the latency, refresh rate and software stack of conventional gaming monitors.

Across all applications, the principle is the same: improve the optical experience of the existing screen rather than replacing the screen itself.